Change limit for "Mysql Row size too large"

Lasha Kurt picture Lasha Kurt · Mar 23, 2013 · Viewed 202k times · Source

How can I change the limit

Row size too large (> 8126). Changing some columns to TEXT or BLOB or using ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC or ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED may help. In current row format, BLOB prefix of 768 bytes is stored inline.

Table:

id  int(11) No       
name    text    No       
date    date    No       
time    time    No       
schedule    int(11) No       
category    int(11) No       
top_a   varchar(255)    No       
top_b   varchar(255)    No       
top_c   varchar(255)    No       
top_d   varchar(255)    No       
top_e   varchar(255)    No       
top_f   varchar(255)    No       
top_g   varchar(255)    No       
top_h   varchar(255)    No       
top_i   varchar(255)    No       
top_j   varchar(255)    No       
top_title_a varchar(255)    No       
top_title_b varchar(255)    No       
top_title_c varchar(255)    No       
top_title_d varchar(255)    No       
top_title_e varchar(255)    No       
top_title_f varchar(255)    No       
top_title_g varchar(255)    No       
top_title_h varchar(255)    No       
top_title_i varchar(255)    No       
top_title_j varchar(255)    No       
top_desc_a  text    No       
top_desc_b  text    No       
top_desc_c  text    No       
top_desc_d  text    No       
top_desc_e  text    No       
top_desc_f  text    No       
top_desc_g  text    No       
top_desc_h  text    No       
top_desc_i  text    No       
top_desc_j  text    No       
status  int(11) No       
admin_id    int(11) No 

Answer

hjpotter92 picture hjpotter92 · Mar 23, 2013

The question has been asked on serverfault too.

You may want to take a look at this article which explains a lot about MySQL row sizes. It's important to note that even if you use TEXT or BLOB fields, your row size could still be over 8K (limit for InnoDB) because it stores the first 768 bytes for each field inline in the page.

The simplest way to fix this is to use the Barracuda file format with InnoDB. This basically gets rid of the problem altogether by only storing the 20 byte pointer to the text data instead of storing the first 768 bytes.


The method that worked for the OP there was:

  1. Add the following to the my.cnf file under [mysqld] section.

    innodb_file_per_table=1
    innodb_file_format = Barracuda
    
  2. ALTER the table to use ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED.

    ALTER TABLE nombre_tabla
        ENGINE=InnoDB
        ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED 
        KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=8;
    

There is a possibility that the above still does not resolve your issues. It is a known (and verified) bug with the InnoDB engine, and a temporary fix for now is to fallback to MyISAM engine as temporary storage. So, in your my.cnf file:

internal_tmp_disk_storage_engine=MyISAM